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Thermobarometrical and mineral-chemical investigations by electron microprobe and LA-ICP-MS on a sillimanite- bearing pegmatoid from the Reinbolt Hills provide important constraints on the P-T-X-age relations of part of East Antarctica during Pan-African tectonism. U-Th-total Pb ages of monazite imply that the pegmatoid of originally Grenvillan age (zircon U-Pb age of ca. 900 Ma) underwent a major, late Pan-African (Cambrian) regional, granulite-facies metamorphism between 500 and 550 Ma. Most of the monazite formed during this event, as result of apatite metasomatism owing to infiltration of high-grade metamorphic fluids. Apatite-biotite and other mineral thermobarometers define the peak metamorphic temperatures and pressures with 850-950 degrees C and 0.8-1.0 GPa. The F-Cl-OH relations in apatite, and biotite, the chemistry of fluid inclusions and the presence of K-feldspar microveins suggest that the metasomatising fluid was a CO2-bearing, diluted KCl brine. The pegmatoid is the first record of monazite-(Ce) formed from fluorapatite that is rich in U (up to 2.6 Wt% UO2) and possesses Th/U ratios <1 (0.09 on average). These chemical signatures are direct reflection of the U and Th concentration patterns in the parental fluorapatite
The 26 December 2004 Sumatra-Andaman earthquake of Mw 9.3 triggered a massive tsunami in the Indian Ocean. We here report on observations of the Indian Ocean tsunami at broadband seismic stations located on islands in the area. The tsunami induces long-period (> 1000 s) signals on the horizontal components of the sensor. Frequency-time analysis shows that the long-period signals cannot be due to seismic surface waves, but that it arrives at the expected time of the tsunami. The waveforms are well correlated to tide gauge observations at a location where both observations are available. To explain the signals we favour tilt due to coastal loading but we cannot at the present stage exclude gravitational effects. The density of broadband stations is expected to increase rapidly in the effort of building an earthquake monitoring system. They may unexpectedly become useful tsunami detectors as well
Fe K-edge X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) and Mossbauer spectra were collected on synthetic glasses of basaltic composition and of glasses on the sodium oxide-silica binary to establish a relation between the pre- edge of the XANES at the K-edge and the Fe oxidation state of depolymerised glasses. Charges of sample material were equilibrated at ambient pressure, superliquidus temperatures and oxygen fugacities that were varied over a range of about 15 orders of magnitude. Most experiments were carried out in gas-flow furnaces, either with pure oxygen, air, or different CO/CO2 mixtures. For the most reduced conditions, the samples charges were enclosed together with a pellet of the IQF oxygen buffer in an evacuated silica glass ampoule. Fe3+/Sigma Fe x 100 of the samples determined by Mossbauer spectroscopy range between 0% and 100%. Position and intensity of the pre-edge centroid position vary strongly depending on the Fe oxidation state. The pre-edge centroid position and the Fe oxidation state determined by Mossbauer spectroscopy are nonlinearly related and have been fitted by a quadratic polynomial. Alternatively, the ratio of intensities measured at positions sensitive to Fe2+ and Fe3+, respectively, provides an even more sensitive method. Pre- edge intensities of the sample suite indicate average Fe co-ordination between 4 and 6 for all samples regardless of oxidation state. A potential application of the calibration given here opens the possibility of determining Fe oxidation state in glasses of similar compositions with high spatial resolution by use of a Micro-XANES setup (e.g., glass inclusions in natural minerals). (c) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
Fe in magma : an overview
(2005)
The strong influence of physical conditions during magma formation on Fe equilibria offers a large variety of possibilities to deduce these conditions from Fe-bearing phases and phase assemblages found in magmatic rocks. Conditions of magma genesis and their evolution are of major interest for the understanding of volcanic eruptions. A brief overview on the most common methods used is given together with potential problems and limitations. Fe equilibria are not only sensitive to changes in intensive parameters (especially T and fO(2)) and extensive parameters like composition also have major effects, so that direct application of experimentally calibrated equilibria to natural systems is not always possible. Best estimates for pre-eruptive conditions are certainly achieved by studies that relate field observations directly to experimental observations for the composition of interest using as many constraints as possible (phase stability relations, Fe-Ti oxides, Fe partitioning between phases, Fe oxidation state in glass etc.). Local structural environment of Fe in silicate melts is an important parameter that is needed to understand the relationship between melt transport properties and melt structure. Assignment of Fe co-ordination and its relationship to the oxidation state seems not to be straightforward. In addition, there is considerable evidence that the co- ordination of Fe in glass differs from that in the melt, which has to be taken into account when linking melt structure to physical properties of silicate melts at T and P.
The "Bohemians" of New Zealand - an ethnic group? In 1982 a small group of New Zealanders established contacts with the region of origin of their about 200 German-speaking ancestors who had emigrated from Bohemia for economic reasons in the 1860s and 1870s. They had all come from about twenty villages situated west of plzen and founded a rural settlement and participated in the foundation of a second one in New Zealand. Since World War I there had been no further contacts between the emigrants and their descendants on the one hand and their relatives in Bohemia on the other hand. For two reasons new contacts were established after such a long time: (1) the back-to the-roots-movement had spread to New Zealand from the USA, Canada and Australia, and (2) the status of cultural diversity keeps being enhanced in New Zealand since about 1970. These processes also influenced those people in New Zealand who call themselves "Bohemians" because of their ancestors' region of origin. Their total number is estimated at 10, 000 to 15, 000 at present. Up to now hardly any attention was attached to them in New Zealand by academic research and/or the general public. This paper discusses the history and today's situation of the former immigrants' community as well as the New Zealand "Bohemians " in general, raising the questions to what extent they can be defined as an ethnic group now and whether they will retain their status as a specific group in future
A key question for the development of geothermal plants is the seismic detection and monitoring of fluid injections at several kilometers depth. The detection and monitoring limits are controlled by several parameters, for example, the strength of seismic sources, number of receivers, vertical stacking, and noise conditions. For a known reference reflector at 2.66 km depth at a geothermal site in northern Germany the results of a simple surface seismic experiment were therefore combined with numerical forward modeling for different injection scenarios at 3.8 km depth. The underlying idea is that changes of reflectivity from the injection at 3.8 km must be larger than the variance of the measurements to be observable. Assuming that the injection at 3.8 km depth would produce a subhorizontal disklike target with a fracture porosity of 2% or 5% (the critical porosity) the water injection volume has to be at least 443 and 115 m(3), respectively, to be detectable from the surface. If the injection on the other hand does not create subhorizontal but subvertical pathways or only reduces the seismic velocities via the increased pore pressure in the immediate vicinity of the bore hole, the injection is undetectable from the surface. The most promising approach is therefore to move sources and/or receivers closer to the target, that is, the use of borehole instrumentation
Ambient vibration techniques are promising methods for assessing the subsurface structure, in particular the shear-wave velocity profile (V-s). They are based on the dispersion property of surface waves in layered media. Therefore, the penetration depth is intrinsically linked to the energy content of the sources. For ambient vibrations, the spectral content extends in general to lower frequency when compared to classical artificial sources. Among available methods for processing recorded signals, we focus here on the spatial autocorrelation method. For stationary wavefields, the spatial autocorrelation is mathematically related to the frequency-dependent wave velocity c(omega). This allows the determination of the dispersion curve of traveling surface waves, which, in turn, is linked to the V-s profile. Here, we propose a direct inversion scheme for the observed autocorrelation curves to retrieve, in a single step, the V-s profile. The powerful neighborhood algorithm is used to efficiently search for all solutions in an n- dimensional parameter space. This approach has the advantage of taking into account the existing uncertainty over the measured curves, thus generating all V-s profiles that fit the data within their experimental errors. A preprocessing tool is also developed to estimate the validity of the autocorrelation curves and to reject parts of them if necessary before starting the inversion itself. We present two synthetic cases to test the potential of the method: one with ideal autocorrelation curves and another with autocorrelation curves computed from simulated ambient vibrations. The latter case is more realistic and makes it possible to figure out the problems that may be encountered in real experiments. The V-s profiles are correctly retrieved up to the depth of the first major velocity contrast unless low-velocity zones are accepted. We demonstrate that accepting low-velocity zones in the parameterization has a dramatic influence on the result of the inversion, with a considerable increase in the nonuniqueness of the problem. Finally, a real data set is processed with the same method
Cretaceous magmatism in the Eastern Cordillera of Colombia is related to lithospheric stretching during the late Early-early Late Cretaceous. The small amount of preserved igneous material is represented by small mafic intrusions. This study focuses on three localities, from east to west: Pajarito, Pacho, and Caceres. The investigated igneous bodies are classified as gabbros, pyroxene-hornblende-gabbros, and pyroxene-hornblendites mainly composed of plagioclase, clinopyroxene, and/or amphibole. Although their timing of emplacement and geodynamic position seem similar, significant differences in their geochemical and petrological characteristics rule out simple models of melt genesis. Clinopyroxene and bulk chemistry indicate increasing alkalinity from west to east. Trace element concentrations point to melt sources that range from a slightly enriched mantle in the west to a highly enriched one in the east. In addition, the data reflect a decreasing degree of partial melting from west to east and the decreasing importance of residual garnet in the mantle source. Probable mantle metasomatism in the source region by slab-derived fluids, as displayed by high Ba/Nb and moderate Sr-n/P-n, is clear in the west and very slight to the east. Mantle metasomatism and melt generation probably are processes of different epochs. The lack of large volumes of igneous rocks and the absence of tectonically controlled unconformities in the investigated areas indicate that a mantle plume did not affect the regional tectonics and magmatism. We favor a model of rift-related magmatism in which melt composition is modified from east to west from a highly enriched to a less enriched mantle region, the latter metasomatized by fluids derived from an older subduction phase. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Analysis of contemporary and past gully erosion and infilling processes allowed to reconstruct the long-term evolution of a permanent gully system under cropland. An active and a buried gully under cropland were investigated. The recent sediment deposits within the active gully, adjacent to the buried gully, showed that the recent gully was filling in at a mean rate of 6.4 cm a(-1). In the buried gully, several erosion and deposition phases could be identified and the type of deposited sediments revealed a complex infilling history. Charcoal, pottery and brick fragments of different sizes were found at all depths of the gully infilling. Their age indicates that the first gully incised after the midst of the 17th century, most probably in the second half of the 18th century or the early 19th century. Gully morphology and analogy with the processes in the recent gully indicate that the buried gully filled in rapidly. Overall, five cycles of cut and fill occurred in 350 years or less and four cycles even within little less than a few decades, indicating that gully development and infilling under cropland can be very rapid processes. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V All rights reserved
Facies analysis and basin architecture of the Neogene Subandean synorogenic wedge, southern Bolivia
(2005)
Foreland sedimentation in the Subandean Zone of south-central Bolivia spans from the Upper Oligocene to present. It records sediment dispersal patterns in an initially distal and later proximal retroarc foreland basin, and thereby contains stratigraphic information on the tectonic evolution of the adjacent Andean fold-thrust belt. Within the Neogene orogenic wedge individual siliciclastic-dominated depositional systems formed ahead of an eastward-propagating deformation regime. We defined, described, and interpreted eight architectural elements and 24 lithofacies from 15 outcrop locations representing the Neogene foreland basin in the Subandean Zone and the Chaco Plain. These are combined to interpret depositional settings. The up to 7.5 km-thick Neogene wedge is subdivided in five stratigraphic units on the basis of facies associations and overall architecture: (1) The basal, Oligocene-Miocene, up to 250 m-thick Petaca Formation consists dominantly of calcrete, reworked conglomeratic pedogenic clasts, and fluvial sandstone and mudstone. This unit is interpreted to represent extensive pedogenesis under an and to semiarid climate with subordinate braided fluvial processes. (2) The overlying, Upper Miocene, up to 350 m thick Yecua Formation records numerous small-scale transgressive-regressive cycles of marginal marine, tidal, and shoreline facies of sandstone, ooid limestones, and varicoloured mudstone. (3) The Upper Miocene, up to 4500 m-thick Tariquia Formation principally consists of sandstone with interbedded sandstone-mudstone couplets representing frequent crevassing in anastomosing streams with an upsection- increasing degree of connectedness. (4) The up to 1500 m-thick Lower Pliocene Guandacay Formation represents braided streams and consists principally of granule to cobble conglomerate interbedded with sandstone and sandy mudstone. (5) The Upper Pliocene, up to 2000 m-thick Emborozu Formation consists predominantly of alluvial-fan-deposited cobble to boulder conglomerate interbedded with sandstone and sandy mudstone. The coarsening- and thickening-upward pattern and eastward progradation, coupled with the variable proportions of overbank facies, channel size, and degree of channel abandonment, in the Tariquia, Guandacay, and Emborozu Formations reflect a distal through proximal fluvial megafan environment. This long-lived megafan grew by high sedimentation rates and a north east-through-southeast radial paleoflow pattern on large, coarse-grained sediment lobes. The marked overall upsection change in pattern and depositional styles indicate fluctuations in accommodation space and sediment supply, regulated by basin subsidence, and are attributable to Andean tectonics and climatic controls. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved